Intensive Teaching: Examining Teachers’ Professional Pressures and Pedagogical Practices at an Elite School

2021 ◽  
pp. 097318492110632
Author(s):  
Adrienne Lee Atterberry

This article asks the following questions: What pressures do teachers face from parents and senior administrators? How do the pressures teachers face from parents and senior administrators affect how they teach students? Specifically, how does this affect the methods they engage in to generate ‘good’ student outcomes? It answers these questions by analysing interviews with 24 high school teachers at an elite international school in Bangalore, a city in southwest India. This article argues that the pressures teachers face from senior administrators and parents to produce high-achieving students result in them engaging in intensive teaching practices. These practices represent teachers’ attempts to produce students capable of earning high grades and entrance into competitive colleges and universities. This article extends our understanding of the factors that shape teachers’ pedagogical practices by making explicit connections between affluent parenting practices and the professional roles of teachers at elite schools. As such, this article makes important contributions to the literature on the sociology of education and teaching.

1968 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 317-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
William E. Bishop

The purpose of this study was to analyze selected characteristics of high school teachers who were identified as successful by intellectually gifted high achieving students, and to discover what differentiated these teachers from teachers not so identified. More specifically, the study was concerned with personal and social traits and behaviors, professional attitudes and educational viewpoints, and classroom behavior patterns of effective teachers of gifted high school students.


Author(s):  
Tina L. Heafner ◽  
Eric Groce ◽  
Elizabeth Bellows ◽  
Heather Coffey ◽  
Mette Evelyn Bjerre

Within social studies, researchers note limited attention has been given to examining gender differences associated with technology integration, and have called for increased dialogue regarding gender-related technology issues (Crocco, 2006, 2008; Crocco, Cramer, & Meier, 2008; Friedman & Hicks, 2006; Marri, 2007; Mason, Manfra, & Siko, 2005; Sanders, 2006). In response, this chapter explores the gender divide in secondary teachers' perceptions of effective technology integration. Using a qualitative research design, this chapter provides insight into social studies teachers' perceptions of their pedagogical practices and technology integration. The purpose of this study is to develop an understanding of the differences in male and female teachers' use of technology to teach and support student learning. Consideration of how technology is associated with gender-sensitive pedagogical thinking and practice may address the aforementioned gap in technology usage in social studies. Patterns uncovered in data analysis suggest that gender plays a critical role in social studies technology integration. The results from this study can inform methods in which technology is integrated into future social studies classrooms, particularly in emerging areas such as online courses.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 23-32
Author(s):  
Anupama Mahajan

In the recent years, the conception of giftedness in children has garnered a lot of attention from educationists and psychologists in India. Children marked as gifted are said to display above average abilities as compared with their peers. In this paper, I attempt to show that despite multiple notions and theories of giftedness, displaying exceptional abilities in mathematics and science seem to be the dominant focus and trend. In support of this claim, I list out the various Gifted and Talented Programmes of Giftedness in India. By exploring the various landscapes of excellence across diverse schooling environment, I draw from my doctoral research to highlight the ways in which giftedness is socially circulating and the factors that produce, and the processes that enable and sustain it. Through this study, I hope to contribute to the sociology of education in terms of understanding middle class / elite aspirations with regard to education of their children, elite parenting practices, conceptions of giftedness and how ‘cultural capital’ is transmitted from one generation to the next.


Author(s):  
Tina L. Heafner ◽  
Eric Groce ◽  
Elizabeth Bellows ◽  
Heather Coffey ◽  
Mette Evelyn Bjerre

Within social studies, researchers note limited attention has been given to examining gender differences associated with technology integration, and have called for increased dialogue regarding gender-related technology issues (Crocco, 2006, 2008; Crocco, Cramer, & Meier, 2008; Friedman & Hicks, 2006; Marri, 2007; Mason, Manfra, & Siko, 2005; Sanders, 2006). In response, this chapter explores the gender divide in secondary teachers' perceptions of effective technology integration. Using a qualitative research design, this chapter provides insight into social studies teachers' perceptions of their pedagogical practices and technology integration. The purpose of this study is to develop an understanding of the differences in male and female teachers' use of technology to teach and support student learning. Consideration of how technology is associated with gender-sensitive pedagogical thinking and practice may address the aforementioned gap in technology usage in social studies. Patterns uncovered in data analysis suggest that gender plays a critical role in social studies technology integration. The results from this study can inform methods in which technology is integrated into future social studies classrooms, particularly in emerging areas such as online courses.


Author(s):  
Ranbir Singh Malik

Against the backdrop of changing environment and demands inthe digital era, this article proposes a pathway to rigorous teachertraining and effective teaching. To this end the following threeessential subtopics are extensively and intensively discussed:Effective Teacher Training, Profile and Pedagogical Practices ofHigh Performing Education Systems, and Education Reforms inASEAN.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-27
Author(s):  
Greg Conderman ◽  
Laura Hedin

Study guides are a popular and frequently student-requested instructional support developed primarily by upper elementary, middle, and high school teachers to help students navigate through a course of study. With the increase of the number of learners with diverse needs in general education classrooms, teachers need to be mindful of various ways to differentiate study guides, that is, make adjustments that maintain the integrity of student outcomes while offering choices and respecting each learner’s background knowledge, skill-level, interests, and learning preferences. Specifically, teachers can differentiate study guides by adjusting questions and content, providing different kinds of study guides, allowing students to demonstrate knowledge in different ways, reinforcing student efforts, and allowing students to use classroom materials and space in various ways. This article presents ways teachers can apply the components of differentiation to maximize the use of study guides in inclusive classrooms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Torres Cañete

Since the second half of the twentieth century, a series of research projects conducted in Central Europe and the United Kingdom have proposed and addressed geographical objects of study in response to specific concerns about their own educational systems. Both currents are beginning to converge; they are disciplinarily distinct from previous developments in the sociology of education and are consolidating as a subfield. However, they still fail to link consistently to everyday educational spaces and the improvement of pedagogical practices. Based on these elements, a state of the art of the Geography of Education is presented, showing its growing potential to effectively contribute to the quality of teaching at the scale of the places where people learn. Some of the most promising research agendas on this line of studies are also established.


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